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Citadel Hill (Fort George)

Citadel Hill is a hill that is a National Historic Site in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Four fortifications have been constructed on Citadel Hill since the city was founded by the English in 1749, and were referred to as Fort George—but only the third fort (built between 1794 and 1800) was officially named Fort George. According to General Orders of October 20, 1798, it was named after King George III. The first two and the fourth and current fort, were officially called the Halifax Citadel. The last is a concrete star fort.

Halifax Citadel
Fort George (1796–1828)
Aerial view of Citadel Hill
LocationHalifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Coordinates44°38′51″N 63°34′49″W / 44.64750°N 63.58028°W / 44.64750; -63.58028Coordinates: 44°38′51″N 63°34′49″W / 44.64750°N 63.58028°W / 44.64750; -63.58028
Built1749 (first Citadel)
1828–56 (present Citadel)
Official nameHalifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada
Designated25 May 1935

The Citadel is the fortified summit of Citadel Hill. The hill was first fortified in 1749, the year that Edward Cornwallis oversaw the development of the town of Halifax. Those fortifications were successively rebuilt to defend the town from various enemies. Construction and leveling have lowered the summit by ten to twelve metres. While never attacked, the Citadel was long the keystone to defence of the strategically important Halifax Harbour and its Royal Navy Dockyard.

Today, Parks Canada operates the site as the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada. It has restored the fort to its appearance when built in the Victorian era.[1]

Predecessors

First Citadel (1749–1776)

The English founded Halifax in 1749 to establish a presence in Nova Scotia as a counterbalance to the French stronghold of Louisbourg, which the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) had returned to France. Halifax was a strategic centre during the next decade in the continuing Anglo-French rivalry in the region.[2] The English had recruited Protestant settlers from England, the Palatine, and Switzerland, and constructed fortifications to protect them against raids by the French, colonial Acadians, and allies from the Wabanaki Confederacy (primarily the Mi'kmaq). This conflict is known to some historians as Father Le Loutre's War.

The war began shortly after Edward Cornwallis, appointed Governor of Nova Scotia, arrived on June 21, 1749, to establish Halifax. He traveled on a sloop of war, followed by 13 transports (some sources say 15) that carried a total of 1,176-2500 settlers.[3]

On September 11, 1749, Cornwallis wrote to the Board of Trade, which supervised this colonial effort:

 
Construction for the first Citadel. British soldiers of the 29th Regiment of Foot guard against Acadian and Mi'kmaw raids.
"The Square at the top of the Hill is finished. These squares are done with double picquets, each picquet ten foot long and six inches thick. They likewise clear a Space of 30 feet without the Line and throw up the Trees by way of Barricade. When this work is compleated [sic] I shall think the Town as secure against Indians as if it was regularly fortify'd."[4][5]

The first fort was a small redoubt, with a flagstaff and guardhouse near the summit just east of the south ravelin of the present citadel.[6] It was part of the western perimeter wall for the old city, which was protected by five stockaded forts. The others were Horsemans Fort,[7] Cornwallis Fort, Fort Lutrell, and Grenadier Fort. The British also built Fort Charlotte - named after King George's wife Charlotte - on Georges Island in 1750.

The fortified city walls, guarded by five stockaded forts to protect against Mi'kmaq, Acadian, and French attacks, was the centre of a network of fortifications Cornwallis built. Others included Bedford (Fort Sackville) (1749), Dartmouth (1750), Lunenburg (1753) and Lawrencetown (1754).

During Father Le Loutre's War, the soldiers guarding Halifax were constantly on alert. The Mi'kmaq and Acadians raided the capital region (Halifax and Dartmouth) 12 times, four times against Halifax itself. The worst of these raids was what the British call the Dartmouth Massacre (1751). The first raid was in July 1750: the Mi'kmaq scalped Cornwallis' gardener, his son, and four others whom they had caught in the woods near Halifax. They buried the son, left the gardener's body exposed, and carried off the other four bodies.[8]

 
Depiction of Halifax and the surrounding fortifications, 1750. The settlement was protected by city walls and several forts acting as redoubts, including the First Citadel.

In 1751, two attacks were made on blockhouses surrounding Halifax. The Mi'kmaq attacked the North Blockhouse (located at the north end of Joseph Howe Drive) and killed the men on guard. They also attacked near the South Blockhouse (located at the south end of Joseph Howe Drive), at a sawmill on a stream flowing from Chocolate Lake into the Northwest Arm. They killed two men.[9] (Map of Halifax Blockhouses)

In 1753, when Lawrence became governor of Nova Scotia, the Mi'kmaq again attacked the sawmills near the South Blockhouse on the Northwest Arm, where they killed three British. The Mi'kmaq made three attempts to retrieve the bodies for their scalps.[10]

Prominent Halifax business person Michael Francklin was captured by a Mi'kmaw raiding party in 1754 and held captive for three months. Adult captives were often held for ransom, to be raised by families or local communities[11]

The stockaded forts were also instrumental to the British during the French and Indian War (the North American theatre of the Seven Years' War). British soldiers stationed in Halifax helped conduct the expulsion of the Acadians, as many Acadians were imprisoned on Georges Island in Halifax harbour before their deportation. During the war, the Mi'kmaq and Acadians resisted the British throughout the province. On 2 April 1756, the Mi'kmaq were paid a bounty from the Governor of Quebec for 12 British scalps taken at Halifax.[12] Acadian Pierre Gautier, son of Joseph-Nicolas Gautier, led Mi'kmaq warriors from Louisbourg on three raids against Halifax in 1757. In each raid, Gautier took prisoners or scalps or both. During the last raid in September, Gautier, with four Mi'kmaq warriors, killed and scalped two British men at the foot of Citadel Hill.[13] In July 1759, Mi'kmaq and Acadians killed five British in Dartmouth, opposite McNabb's Island.[14]

By 1761, the condition of the Halifax Citadel had deteriorated, and the British built a new one.[1] Although plans were drafted in 1761, construction was delayed due to events of the Seven Years War.[1] Given the threat of attack from rebels in the British Thirteen Colonies after the American Revolutionary War started in 1776, the British constructed the Second Citadel in an enlarged version of the 1761 plans.[1]

Second Citadel (1776–1795)

 
Depiction of Citadel Hill during the American Revolution, viewed from Fort Needham, 1780.

The first major permanent fortification were completed on Citadel Hill during the American Revolution.[6] Built in 1776, the new fort on Citadel Hill was composed of multiple lines of overlapping earthen redans backing a large outer palisade wall. At the center was a three-story octagonal blockhouse mounting a fourteen-gun battery and accommodating 100 troops. These works required that the hill be cut down by 40 feet. The entire fortress mounted 72 guns.[15] Citadel Hill and the associated harbour defence fortifications afforded the Royal Navy the most secure and strategic base in eastern North America from its Halifax Dockyard commanding the Great Circle Route to western Europe and gave Halifax the nickname "Warden of The North". The massive British military presence in Halifax focused through Citadel Hill and the Royal Navy's dockyard is thought to be one of the main reasons that Nova Scotia—the fourteenth British colony—remained loyal to the Crown throughout and after the American Revolutionary War.

Neither French nor American forces attacked Citadel Hill during the American Revolution. But the garrison remained on guard because of the numerous rebel American privateer raids on villages around the province (such as the Raid on Lunenburg), and the naval battles off the shore of Halifax).

By 1784 the fortification was in ruins except for the blockhouse.[1] During the French Revolutionary Wars, the British Commander-in-Chief, North America, Prince Edward, found the fortifications inadequate for the city's defence.[1] Although plans for the Third Citadel were drafted in 1795, construction for the new fortification did not begin until 1796, after the Second Citadel was dismantled.[1]

Third Citadel (1796–1828)

 
Built in 1803, the Halifax Town Clock is a major landmark built on the eastern slope of Citadel Hill.

The French Revolutionary Wars that began in 1793 raised a new threat to Halifax. A new citadel was designed in 1794 and completed by 1800. Much of the work was inspired by Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, the fourth son of King George III and the father of Queen Victoria, who was posted to Halifax as Commander-in-chief from 1794 to 1800. The top of the hill was levelled and lowered a further 15 feet to accommodate a larger fortress on the summit. It resembled the outline of the final Citadel, comprising four bastions surrounding a central barracks and magazine, but used mainly earthwork walls.[16] One bastion was constructed by Jamaican Maroons, who were transported from the Caribbean.

Prince Edward, Duke of Kent commissioned the Halifax Town Clock in 1800 prior to his return to England. The Halifax Town Clock opened on 20 October 1803, at a location on the east slope of Citadel Hill on Barrack (now Brunswick) Street. It continues to keep time for the community in the 21st century. Nova Scotia's first Tel-graph system developed to pass on news of approaching ships to the Citadel and extended to Annapolis Royal. This system of flag communications begins at the Camperdown Signal Station, just north of Duncan's Cove.[17][18][19][20]

The Third Citadel received hasty repairs and a new magazine during the War of 1812 in case of an American raid, but the British did not construct new fortifications. The significant British Royal Navy presence in this area made an American siege unlikely. By 1825 all the works except the powder magazine were in ruins, and a new citadel was being designed.[1]

Present Citadel (1828–present)

Construction for the present citadel began in 1828.[1] However, the star-shaped fortress was not completed until in 1856, during the Victorian Era, for a total of 28 years of construction. This massive masonry-construction fort was designed to repel both a land-based attack or attack from the water by United States forces and was inspired by the designs of Louis XIV's commissary of fortifications Sébastien Le Prestre, Seigneur de Vauban.[citation needed] It was a star-shaped hillock citadel with internal courtyard and a clear harbour view from armoured ramparts. The shape of the hill and the "moat area" were structured so as to give multiple lines of fire from defenders. In case of overwhelming attack, portions of the hill had tunnels which could be packed with explosives and detonated from the fort; these tunnels extend about 100' from the outerwalls and are "T" shaped, the top of the T about 50' wide. Brick walled about 4' high and 4' wide, the top is made of stone slabs topped with gravel, then dirt and sod. The intention was that gravel would act as shrapnel. Between 1820 and 1831, the British had constructed a similar, albeit larger, citadel in Quebec City known as the Citadel of Quebec.

 
View of Citadel Hill, with its cannons pointed towards Halifax Harbour. Completed in 1856, the fortification was designed also to repel a land-based attack by the United States.

The soldiers at the Halifax Citadel were on alert when Nova Scotia became the site of two international incidents during the American Civil War: the Chesapeake Affair, when Maritime Confederate sympathizers captured a United States ship, killing an American in the process. American warships entered these waters to recapture the ship. In addition, Confederate John Taylor Wood escaped from Halifax Harbour on the CSS Tallahassee.[21]

The Halifax Citadel was constructed to defend against smoothbore weaponry; it became obsolete following the introduction of more powerful rifled guns in the 1860s. British forces upgraded Fort George's armaments to permit it to defend the harbour as well as land approaches, using heavier and more accurate long-range artillery. The Citadel's two large ammunition magazines also served as the central explosive store for Halifax defences, making Citadel Hill, according to the historian and novelist Thomas Head Raddall, "like Vesuvius over Pompeii, a smiling monster with havoc in its belly".[22] By the end of the 19th century, the role of the Citadel in the defence of Halifax Harbour had evolved as it was used as a command centre for other, more distant harbour defensive works. It also provided barrack accommodations.

The 78th (Highlanders) Regiment of Foot were stationed at Halifax for almost three years (1869-1871). The regiment arrived in Halifax on the afternoon of May 14 aboard the troopship HMS Crocodile. A total of 765 men disembarked in full dress uniform. The Regiment was divided into two depots and eight service companies, consisting in all of 34 officers, 49 sergeants, 21 drummers, 6 pipers, and 600 rank and file.[23]

For two years, the regiment was billeted at the Halifax Citadel and at Wellington Barracks. The latter is now known as Stadacona and is part of Canadian Forces Base Halifax. Each summer, men from the regiment camped at Bedford to practice musketry at the military range.[24]

Before their departure in 1871, a farewell ball was arranged for them, complete with a musical tribute composed in their honour. It was hosted by Alexander Keith, mayor of Halifax and noted brewmaster, who became Grandmaster of the Mason Lodge of Nova Scotia.[24] On November 25, the regiment set sail for Ireland on board the troopship Orontes. With them went 17 young Nova Scotian women who had married members of the regiment.[24] Citadel Hill's various fortifications were garrisoned by the British Army until 1906, and afterward by the Canadian Army throughout the First World War. It was never attacked.

 
Prisoners of war at the Halifax Citadel ca. 1917 prior to the opening of a permanent prisoner-of-war camp in Amherst

When the Great War began in 1914, there was widespread suspicion in Canada that immigrants from enemy countries might be disloyal. The federal government passed regulations allowing it to monitor and intern anyone who had not become naturalized British subjects. These people were labelled "enemy aliens." In total 8,579 men were held as prisoners of war in 24 camps across the country.[25]

There were three Internment camps in Nova Scotia: Amherst Internment Camp (April 1915 to September 1919); one on Melville Island in the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour, and one in Citadel Hill (Fort George) (September 1914 to October 1918).[26] Unlike the rest of Canada, where internees were mostly of Eastern European origin, the internees in Nova Scotia were mainly ethnic German reservists.[25]

Fort George's final military role was to provide temporary barracks, signaling, and the central coordinating point for the city's anti-aircraft defences during the Second World War.

Recent history

 
Re-enactors depicting soldiers of the 78th Highland Regiment. The Citadel opened in 1956 as a historic site and a living history museum.

In 1935, the hill and fortifications were designated a National Historic Site and received some stabilization as a works project during the Depression.[27] The fort was not restored and began to decay after the end of the Second World War. In the late 1940s, Halifax downtown business interests advocated demolishing the fort and leveling Citadel Hill to provide parking and encourage development.[28]

But recognition of the fort's historical significance and tourism potential led to the fort's preservation and gradual restoration. Historian Harry Piers conducted research that supported this case and helped raise funds to restore the Citadel.[29]

In 1956, the partially restored fort opened as a historic site and home to the Halifax Army museum. Before the construction of new purpose-built museums, it also served as home to the Nova Scotia Museum and the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. In the 1990s the Citadel was fully restored to its 1869 appearance by Parks Canada. It was common during the early 1980's for restoration workers to place dated coins in mortar or under replaced stones as the walls were rebuilt, these coins were left as an "unofficial" indication of what areas had been worked and when. Much of the restoration work involved removing stone and breaking down walls, re-engineering, installing 100 mm (4 in) PVC conduits for wiring and waterproofing, then restoring each stone to its original location. The mortar used for re-pointing and techniques were correct to the origin, although modern material of the era were used inside the walls along with plasticised cements. Even the tops of wall were deliberately shaped to the original dimension, angles and material with 200 mm (8 in) thick staggered layers of sod secured by 300–410 mm (12–16 in) cedar spikes.

The site continues to be managed by Parks Canada. The fort is amongst the most visited National Historic Sites in Atlantic Canada.

The grounds of the Halifax Citadel are open year round. From spring to fall, a living history program features animators (re-enactors) portraying the 78th Highland Regiment (stationed at Halifax between 1869 and 1871), the 78th Highlanders (Halifax Citadel) Pipe Band, the Third Brigade of the Royal Artillery, soldiers' wives, and civilian tradespeople. Parks Canada also hosts several re-enactment events each year by volunteers of the Brigade of the American Revolution and the two living history associations.[30]

 
Guided and self-guided tours watch the daily noon-gun firing ceremony.

Guided and self-guided tours, and audio-visual presentations and exhibits communicate the Citadel's role in the history of Halifax and North America. A year-round daily ceremonial firing of the noon gun is conducted, as a reminder of the fort's role in the city's history. The artillery is also used for formal occasions such as 21-gun salutes.

The "Army Museum", located in the Citadel's Cavalier Block, displays a rare collection of weapons, medals, and uniforms exploring Nova Scotia's army history. It is an independent non-profit museum and staff work in close partnership with the Citadel staff of Parks Canada.

In July 2006, Halifax Citadel celebrated the 100th anniversary of the withdrawal of the last British military forces from Canada. The Citadel hosted over 1,000 re-enactors from around the world. Approaching the Christmas season, Citadel Hill annually hosts a "Victorian Christmas". Visitors are treated to crafts, carolers, and games.

Ghost tours are held at the fort in the weeks leading up to Halloween.[31]

Halifax Defence Complex

 
The York Redoubt is a shore battery situated south of Citadel Hill, and a component of the larger Halifax Defence Complex. The Citadel served as the centre of the defence complex.

The Halifax Citadel and its predecessors were the focal point of the defence complex that made up the British imperial fortress of Halifax. Other fortifications that form the defence complex include:

In popular culture

The Halifax Citadels were an American Hockey League team that played from 1988–93 at the Halifax Metro Center, just below Citadel Hill.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada". National Historic Sites. Parks Canada. 19 September 2018. Retrieved 10 October 2018.
  2. ^ Johnston, A.J.B. (2013). Louisbourg: Past, Present, Future. Nimbus Publishing.
  3. ^ Grenier, John. The Far Reaches of Empire. War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. Norman: U of Oklahoma P, 2008; Thomas Beamish Akins. History of Halifax, Brookhouse Press. 1895. (2002 edition). p 7
  4. ^ Bell Twatio. Battles without Borders. p. 157
  5. ^ Cornwallis letter 11 September 1749, Internet Archive
  6. ^ a b Thomas B. Akins. History of Halifax City. Brook House Press. 2002 reprint. p. 209
  7. ^ Named after a member of the Nova Scotia Council.
  8. ^ Atkins (1895/2002). History of Halifax City, p 334
  9. ^ Piers, Harry. The Evolution of the Halifax Fortress 2012-11-02 at the Wayback Machine (Halifax, PANS, Pub. #7, 1947), p. 6. As cited in Peter Landry's The Lion and the Lily. Vol. 1. Trafford Press. 2007. p. 370
  10. ^ Atkins (1895/2002), History of Halifax City, p 209
  11. ^ Fischer, L. R. (1979). "Francklin, Michael". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IV (1771–1800) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  12. ^ J.S. McLennan. Louisbourg: From Its Foundation to Its Fall (1713-1758). 1918, p. 190
  13. ^ Earle Lockerby. "Pre-Deportation Letters from Île Saint Jean", Les Cahiers. La Societe hitorique acadienne. Vol. 42, No2. June 2011. pp. 99-100
  14. ^ Beamish Murdoch. History of Nova Scotia. Vol.2, p. 366
  15. ^ Piers, p. 16-17
  16. ^ Parks Canada Agency, Government of Canada (August 18, 2021). "Halifax Citadel National Historic Site - index". parks.canada.ca.
  17. ^ https://dalspace.library.dal.ca/bitstream/handle/10222/63970/dalrev_vol27_iss2_pp131_142.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y.[bare URL PDF]
  18. ^ "Halifax Coast Guard Radio VCS".
  19. ^ "Camperdown, Halifax, Nova Scotia Plans and sections of Barracks and Signal Station". March 21, 1878 – via The National Archives (UK).
  20. ^ www.coastalradio.org.uk (PDF) . Archived from the original on 2021-01-10. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. ^ Marquis, Greg. In Armageddon's Shadow: The Civil War and Canada's Maritime Provinces. McGill-Queen's University Press. 1998.
  22. ^ Raddall, Thomas Head (1948). Halifax, Warden of the North. McClelland & Stewart. pp. 153–154. ISBN 9780771072468.
  23. ^ "The 78th Highlanders or Ross-Shire Buffs 1796 - 1817". www.electricscotland.com.
  24. ^ a b c "The Halifax Citadel - Bringing Life to History". www.halifaxcitadel.ca.
  25. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2015-05-10. Retrieved 2013-06-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ "Internment Camps in Canada during the First and Second World Wars, Library and Archives Canada".
  27. ^ Halifax Citadel. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  28. ^ Raddall, Thomas Head (1948). Halifax, Warden of the North. McClelland & Stewart. p. 336. ISBN 9780771072468.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-06-17. Retrieved 2013-05-20.
  30. ^ "The Atlantic Canadian Military History Association". The Atlantic Canadian Military History Association.
  31. ^ Parks Canada Agency, Government of Canada (2020-08-26). "Ghost tours at the Halifax Ciatdel National Historic Site - Halifax Citadel National Historic Site". www.pc.gc.ca. Retrieved 2020-09-10.

Further reading

  • Cuthbertson, Brian, The Halifax Citadel: Portrait of a Military Fortress, 2001, Formac Publishing Company, Ltd., Halifax.
  • The Evolution of the Halifax Fortress, 1749-1928 Piers, Harry, Self, G.M., Blakeley, Phyllis R. (Phyllis Ruth)

External links

  • Official website

citadel, hill, fort, george, halifax, citadel, redirects, here, provincial, electoral, district, halifax, citadel, sable, island, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensu. Halifax Citadel redirects here For the provincial electoral district see Halifax Citadel Sable Island This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Citadel Hill is a hill that is a National Historic Site in Halifax Nova Scotia Canada Four fortifications have been constructed on Citadel Hill since the city was founded by the English in 1749 and were referred to as Fort George but only the third fort built between 1794 and 1800 was officially named Fort George According to General Orders of October 20 1798 it was named after King George III The first two and the fourth and current fort were officially called the Halifax Citadel The last is a concrete star fort Halifax CitadelFort George 1796 1828 Aerial view of Citadel HillLocationHalifax Nova Scotia CanadaCoordinates44 38 51 N 63 34 49 W 44 64750 N 63 58028 W 44 64750 63 58028 Coordinates 44 38 51 N 63 34 49 W 44 64750 N 63 58028 W 44 64750 63 58028Built1749 first Citadel 1828 56 present Citadel National Historic Site of CanadaOfficial nameHalifax Citadel National Historic Site of CanadaDesignated25 May 1935The Citadel is the fortified summit of Citadel Hill The hill was first fortified in 1749 the year that Edward Cornwallis oversaw the development of the town of Halifax Those fortifications were successively rebuilt to defend the town from various enemies Construction and leveling have lowered the summit by ten to twelve metres While never attacked the Citadel was long the keystone to defence of the strategically important Halifax Harbour and its Royal Navy Dockyard Today Parks Canada operates the site as the Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada It has restored the fort to its appearance when built in the Victorian era 1 Contents 1 Predecessors 1 1 First Citadel 1749 1776 1 2 Second Citadel 1776 1795 1 3 Third Citadel 1796 1828 2 Present Citadel 1828 present 2 1 Recent history 3 Halifax Defence Complex 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksPredecessors EditFirst Citadel 1749 1776 Edit The English founded Halifax in 1749 to establish a presence in Nova Scotia as a counterbalance to the French stronghold of Louisbourg which the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle 1748 had returned to France Halifax was a strategic centre during the next decade in the continuing Anglo French rivalry in the region 2 The English had recruited Protestant settlers from England the Palatine and Switzerland and constructed fortifications to protect them against raids by the French colonial Acadians and allies from the Wabanaki Confederacy primarily the Mi kmaq This conflict is known to some historians as Father Le Loutre s War The war began shortly after Edward Cornwallis appointed Governor of Nova Scotia arrived on June 21 1749 to establish Halifax He traveled on a sloop of war followed by 13 transports some sources say 15 that carried a total of 1 176 2500 settlers 3 On September 11 1749 Cornwallis wrote to the Board of Trade which supervised this colonial effort Construction for the first Citadel British soldiers of the 29th Regiment of Foot guard against Acadian and Mi kmaw raids The Square at the top of the Hill is finished These squares are done with double picquets each picquet ten foot long and six inches thick They likewise clear a Space of 30 feet without the Line and throw up the Trees by way of Barricade When this work is compleated sic I shall think the Town as secure against Indians as if it was regularly fortify d 4 5 The first fort was a small redoubt with a flagstaff and guardhouse near the summit just east of the south ravelin of the present citadel 6 It was part of the western perimeter wall for the old city which was protected by five stockaded forts The others were Horsemans Fort 7 Cornwallis Fort Fort Lutrell and Grenadier Fort The British also built Fort Charlotte named after King George s wife Charlotte on Georges Island in 1750 The fortified city walls guarded by five stockaded forts to protect against Mi kmaq Acadian and French attacks was the centre of a network of fortifications Cornwallis built Others included Bedford Fort Sackville 1749 Dartmouth 1750 Lunenburg 1753 and Lawrencetown 1754 During Father Le Loutre s War the soldiers guarding Halifax were constantly on alert The Mi kmaq and Acadians raided the capital region Halifax and Dartmouth 12 times four times against Halifax itself The worst of these raids was what the British call the Dartmouth Massacre 1751 The first raid was in July 1750 the Mi kmaq scalped Cornwallis gardener his son and four others whom they had caught in the woods near Halifax They buried the son left the gardener s body exposed and carried off the other four bodies 8 Depiction of Halifax and the surrounding fortifications 1750 The settlement was protected by city walls and several forts acting as redoubts including the First Citadel In 1751 two attacks were made on blockhouses surrounding Halifax The Mi kmaq attacked the North Blockhouse located at the north end of Joseph Howe Drive and killed the men on guard They also attacked near the South Blockhouse located at the south end of Joseph Howe Drive at a sawmill on a stream flowing from Chocolate Lake into the Northwest Arm They killed two men 9 Map of Halifax Blockhouses In 1753 when Lawrence became governor of Nova Scotia the Mi kmaq again attacked the sawmills near the South Blockhouse on the Northwest Arm where they killed three British The Mi kmaq made three attempts to retrieve the bodies for their scalps 10 Prominent Halifax business person Michael Francklin was captured by a Mi kmaw raiding party in 1754 and held captive for three months Adult captives were often held for ransom to be raised by families or local communities 11 The stockaded forts were also instrumental to the British during the French and Indian War the North American theatre of the Seven Years War British soldiers stationed in Halifax helped conduct the expulsion of the Acadians as many Acadians were imprisoned on Georges Island in Halifax harbour before their deportation During the war the Mi kmaq and Acadians resisted the British throughout the province On 2 April 1756 the Mi kmaq were paid a bounty from the Governor of Quebec for 12 British scalps taken at Halifax 12 Acadian Pierre Gautier son of Joseph Nicolas Gautier led Mi kmaq warriors from Louisbourg on three raids against Halifax in 1757 In each raid Gautier took prisoners or scalps or both During the last raid in September Gautier with four Mi kmaq warriors killed and scalped two British men at the foot of Citadel Hill 13 In July 1759 Mi kmaq and Acadians killed five British in Dartmouth opposite McNabb s Island 14 By 1761 the condition of the Halifax Citadel had deteriorated and the British built a new one 1 Although plans were drafted in 1761 construction was delayed due to events of the Seven Years War 1 Given the threat of attack from rebels in the British Thirteen Colonies after the American Revolutionary War started in 1776 the British constructed the Second Citadel in an enlarged version of the 1761 plans 1 Second Citadel 1776 1795 Edit Depiction of Citadel Hill during the American Revolution viewed from Fort Needham 1780 The first major permanent fortification were completed on Citadel Hill during the American Revolution 6 Built in 1776 the new fort on Citadel Hill was composed of multiple lines of overlapping earthen redans backing a large outer palisade wall At the center was a three story octagonal blockhouse mounting a fourteen gun battery and accommodating 100 troops These works required that the hill be cut down by 40 feet The entire fortress mounted 72 guns 15 Citadel Hill and the associated harbour defence fortifications afforded the Royal Navy the most secure and strategic base in eastern North America from its Halifax Dockyard commanding the Great Circle Route to western Europe and gave Halifax the nickname Warden of The North The massive British military presence in Halifax focused through Citadel Hill and the Royal Navy s dockyard is thought to be one of the main reasons that Nova Scotia the fourteenth British colony remained loyal to the Crown throughout and after the American Revolutionary War Neither French nor American forces attacked Citadel Hill during the American Revolution But the garrison remained on guard because of the numerous rebel American privateer raids on villages around the province such as the Raid on Lunenburg and the naval battles off the shore of Halifax By 1784 the fortification was in ruins except for the blockhouse 1 During the French Revolutionary Wars the British Commander in Chief North America Prince Edward found the fortifications inadequate for the city s defence 1 Although plans for the Third Citadel were drafted in 1795 construction for the new fortification did not begin until 1796 after the Second Citadel was dismantled 1 Third Citadel 1796 1828 Edit Built in 1803 the Halifax Town Clock is a major landmark built on the eastern slope of Citadel Hill The French Revolutionary Wars that began in 1793 raised a new threat to Halifax A new citadel was designed in 1794 and completed by 1800 Much of the work was inspired by Prince Edward Duke of Kent the fourth son of King George III and the father of Queen Victoria who was posted to Halifax as Commander in chief from 1794 to 1800 The top of the hill was levelled and lowered a further 15 feet to accommodate a larger fortress on the summit It resembled the outline of the final Citadel comprising four bastions surrounding a central barracks and magazine but used mainly earthwork walls 16 One bastion was constructed by Jamaican Maroons who were transported from the Caribbean Prince Edward Duke of Kent commissioned the Halifax Town Clock in 1800 prior to his return to England The Halifax Town Clock opened on 20 October 1803 at a location on the east slope of Citadel Hill on Barrack now Brunswick Street It continues to keep time for the community in the 21st century Nova Scotia s first Tel graph system developed to pass on news of approaching ships to the Citadel and extended to Annapolis Royal This system of flag communications begins at the Camperdown Signal Station just north of Duncan s Cove 17 18 19 20 The Third Citadel received hasty repairs and a new magazine during the War of 1812 in case of an American raid but the British did not construct new fortifications The significant British Royal Navy presence in this area made an American siege unlikely By 1825 all the works except the powder magazine were in ruins and a new citadel was being designed 1 Present Citadel 1828 present EditConstruction for the present citadel began in 1828 1 However the star shaped fortress was not completed until in 1856 during the Victorian Era for a total of 28 years of construction This massive masonry construction fort was designed to repel both a land based attack or attack from the water by United States forces and was inspired by the designs of Louis XIV s commissary of fortifications Sebastien Le Prestre Seigneur de Vauban citation needed It was a star shaped hillock citadel with internal courtyard and a clear harbour view from armoured ramparts The shape of the hill and the moat area were structured so as to give multiple lines of fire from defenders In case of overwhelming attack portions of the hill had tunnels which could be packed with explosives and detonated from the fort these tunnels extend about 100 from the outerwalls and are T shaped the top of the T about 50 wide Brick walled about 4 high and 4 wide the top is made of stone slabs topped with gravel then dirt and sod The intention was that gravel would act as shrapnel Between 1820 and 1831 the British had constructed a similar albeit larger citadel in Quebec City known as the Citadel of Quebec View of Citadel Hill with its cannons pointed towards Halifax Harbour Completed in 1856 the fortification was designed also to repel a land based attack by the United States The soldiers at the Halifax Citadel were on alert when Nova Scotia became the site of two international incidents during the American Civil War the Chesapeake Affair when Maritime Confederate sympathizers captured a United States ship killing an American in the process American warships entered these waters to recapture the ship In addition Confederate John Taylor Wood escaped from Halifax Harbour on the CSS Tallahassee 21 The Halifax Citadel was constructed to defend against smoothbore weaponry it became obsolete following the introduction of more powerful rifled guns in the 1860s British forces upgraded Fort George s armaments to permit it to defend the harbour as well as land approaches using heavier and more accurate long range artillery The Citadel s two large ammunition magazines also served as the central explosive store for Halifax defences making Citadel Hill according to the historian and novelist Thomas Head Raddall like Vesuvius over Pompeii a smiling monster with havoc in its belly 22 By the end of the 19th century the role of the Citadel in the defence of Halifax Harbour had evolved as it was used as a command centre for other more distant harbour defensive works It also provided barrack accommodations The 78th Highlanders Regiment of Foot were stationed at Halifax for almost three years 1869 1871 The regiment arrived in Halifax on the afternoon of May 14 aboard the troopship HMS Crocodile A total of 765 men disembarked in full dress uniform The Regiment was divided into two depots and eight service companies consisting in all of 34 officers 49 sergeants 21 drummers 6 pipers and 600 rank and file 23 For two years the regiment was billeted at the Halifax Citadel and at Wellington Barracks The latter is now known as Stadacona and is part of Canadian Forces Base Halifax Each summer men from the regiment camped at Bedford to practice musketry at the military range 24 Before their departure in 1871 a farewell ball was arranged for them complete with a musical tribute composed in their honour It was hosted by Alexander Keith mayor of Halifax and noted brewmaster who became Grandmaster of the Mason Lodge of Nova Scotia 24 On November 25 the regiment set sail for Ireland on board the troopship Orontes With them went 17 young Nova Scotian women who had married members of the regiment 24 Citadel Hill s various fortifications were garrisoned by the British Army until 1906 and afterward by the Canadian Army throughout the First World War It was never attacked Prisoners of war at the Halifax Citadel ca 1917 prior to the opening of a permanent prisoner of war camp in Amherst When the Great War began in 1914 there was widespread suspicion in Canada that immigrants from enemy countries might be disloyal The federal government passed regulations allowing it to monitor and intern anyone who had not become naturalized British subjects These people were labelled enemy aliens In total 8 579 men were held as prisoners of war in 24 camps across the country 25 There were three Internment camps in Nova Scotia Amherst Internment Camp April 1915 to September 1919 one on Melville Island in the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour and one in Citadel Hill Fort George September 1914 to October 1918 26 Unlike the rest of Canada where internees were mostly of Eastern European origin the internees in Nova Scotia were mainly ethnic German reservists 25 Fort George s final military role was to provide temporary barracks signaling and the central coordinating point for the city s anti aircraft defences during the Second World War Recent history Edit Re enactors depicting soldiers of the 78th Highland Regiment The Citadel opened in 1956 as a historic site and a living history museum In 1935 the hill and fortifications were designated a National Historic Site and received some stabilization as a works project during the Depression 27 The fort was not restored and began to decay after the end of the Second World War In the late 1940s Halifax downtown business interests advocated demolishing the fort and leveling Citadel Hill to provide parking and encourage development 28 But recognition of the fort s historical significance and tourism potential led to the fort s preservation and gradual restoration Historian Harry Piers conducted research that supported this case and helped raise funds to restore the Citadel 29 In 1956 the partially restored fort opened as a historic site and home to the Halifax Army museum Before the construction of new purpose built museums it also served as home to the Nova Scotia Museum and the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic In the 1990s the Citadel was fully restored to its 1869 appearance by Parks Canada It was common during the early 1980 s for restoration workers to place dated coins in mortar or under replaced stones as the walls were rebuilt these coins were left as an unofficial indication of what areas had been worked and when Much of the restoration work involved removing stone and breaking down walls re engineering installing 100 mm 4 in PVC conduits for wiring and waterproofing then restoring each stone to its original location The mortar used for re pointing and techniques were correct to the origin although modern material of the era were used inside the walls along with plasticised cements Even the tops of wall were deliberately shaped to the original dimension angles and material with 200 mm 8 in thick staggered layers of sod secured by 300 410 mm 12 16 in cedar spikes The site continues to be managed by Parks Canada The fort is amongst the most visited National Historic Sites in Atlantic Canada The grounds of the Halifax Citadel are open year round From spring to fall a living history program features animators re enactors portraying the 78th Highland Regiment stationed at Halifax between 1869 and 1871 the 78th Highlanders Halifax Citadel Pipe Band the Third Brigade of the Royal Artillery soldiers wives and civilian tradespeople Parks Canada also hosts several re enactment events each year by volunteers of the Brigade of the American Revolution and the two living history associations 30 Guided and self guided tours watch the daily noon gun firing ceremony Guided and self guided tours and audio visual presentations and exhibits communicate the Citadel s role in the history of Halifax and North America A year round daily ceremonial firing of the noon gun is conducted as a reminder of the fort s role in the city s history The artillery is also used for formal occasions such as 21 gun salutes The Army Museum located in the Citadel s Cavalier Block displays a rare collection of weapons medals and uniforms exploring Nova Scotia s army history It is an independent non profit museum and staff work in close partnership with the Citadel staff of Parks Canada In July 2006 Halifax Citadel celebrated the 100th anniversary of the withdrawal of the last British military forces from Canada The Citadel hosted over 1 000 re enactors from around the world Approaching the Christmas season Citadel Hill annually hosts a Victorian Christmas Visitors are treated to crafts carolers and games Ghost tours are held at the fort in the weeks leading up to Halloween 31 Halifax Defence Complex Edit The York Redoubt is a shore battery situated south of Citadel Hill and a component of the larger Halifax Defence Complex The Citadel served as the centre of the defence complex The Halifax Citadel and its predecessors were the focal point of the defence complex that made up the British imperial fortress of Halifax Other fortifications that form the defence complex include Fort Needham HMC Dockyard Fort Massey Fort Ogilvie Prince of Wales Tower Connaught Battery York Redoubt Practice Battery Sandwich Point Camperdown Fort Chebucto Fort Charlotte on George s Island Fort Clarence Devil s Battery Hartlen Point Five forts on McNabs Island Fort Ives Fort Hugonin Sherbrooke Tower Strawberry Hill Fort McNabIn popular culture EditThe Halifax Citadels were an American Hockey League team that played from 1988 93 at the Halifax Metro Center just below Citadel Hill See also Edit Canada portalMilitary history of Nova Scotia History of the Halifax Regional Municipality List of oldest buildings and structures in Halifax Nova ScotiaReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i Halifax Citadel National Historic Site of Canada National Historic Sites Parks Canada 19 September 2018 Retrieved 10 October 2018 Johnston A J B 2013 Louisbourg Past Present Future Nimbus Publishing Grenier John The Far Reaches of Empire War in Nova Scotia 1710 1760 Norman U of Oklahoma P 2008 Thomas Beamish Akins History of Halifax Brookhouse Press 1895 2002 edition p 7 Bell Twatio Battles without Borders p 157 Cornwallis letter 11 September 1749 Internet Archive a b Thomas B Akins History of Halifax City Brook House Press 2002 reprint p 209 Named after a member of the Nova Scotia Council Atkins 1895 2002 History of Halifax City p 334 Piers Harry The Evolution of the Halifax Fortress Archived 2012 11 02 at the Wayback Machine Halifax PANS Pub 7 1947 p 6 As cited in Peter Landry s The Lion and the Lily Vol 1 Trafford Press 2007 p 370 Atkins 1895 2002 History of Halifax City p 209 Fischer L R 1979 Francklin Michael In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press J S McLennan Louisbourg From Its Foundation to Its Fall 1713 1758 1918 p 190 Earle Lockerby Pre Deportation Letters from Ile Saint Jean Les Cahiers La Societe hitorique acadienne Vol 42 No2 June 2011 pp 99 100 Beamish Murdoch History of Nova Scotia Vol 2 p 366 Piers p 16 17 Parks Canada Agency Government of Canada August 18 2021 Halifax Citadel National Historic Site index parks canada ca https dalspace library dal ca bitstream handle 10222 63970 dalrev vol27 iss2 pp131 142 pdf sequence 1 amp isAllowed y bare URL PDF Halifax Coast Guard Radio VCS Camperdown Halifax Nova Scotia Plans and sections of Barracks and Signal Station March 21 1878 via The National Archives UK www coastalradio org uk PDF https web archive org web 20210110073738 http www coastalradio org uk spud spud spud02 pdf Archived from the original on 2021 01 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Marquis Greg In Armageddon s Shadow The Civil War and Canada s Maritime Provinces McGill Queen s University Press 1998 Raddall Thomas Head 1948 Halifax Warden of the North McClelland amp Stewart pp 153 154 ISBN 9780771072468 The 78th Highlanders or Ross Shire Buffs 1796 1817 www electricscotland com a b c The Halifax Citadel Bringing Life to History www halifaxcitadel ca a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 2015 05 10 Retrieved 2013 06 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Internment Camps in Canada during the First and Second World Wars Library and Archives Canada Halifax Citadel Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 9 February 2013 Raddall Thomas Head 1948 Halifax Warden of the North McClelland amp Stewart p 336 ISBN 9780771072468 Who was Piers Harry Piers Museum Maker Nova Scotia Archives Archived from the original on 2013 06 17 Retrieved 2013 05 20 The Atlantic Canadian Military History Association The Atlantic Canadian Military History Association Parks Canada Agency Government of Canada 2020 08 26 Ghost tours at the Halifax Ciatdel National Historic Site Halifax Citadel National Historic Site www pc gc ca Retrieved 2020 09 10 Further reading EditCuthbertson Brian The Halifax Citadel Portrait of a Military Fortress 2001 Formac Publishing Company Ltd Halifax The Evolution of the Halifax Fortress 1749 1928 Piers Harry Self G M Blakeley Phyllis R Phyllis Ruth External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Halifax citadel Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citadel Hill Fort George amp oldid 1147258879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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